dance, tw grief
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dduane
https://dduane.tumblr.com/post/736413989885624320/i-cant-remember-who-said-it-in-the-press-over
:
hayaomiyazaki
https://hayaomiyazaki.tumblr.com/post/736182387395952640/glen-hansard-and-lisa-oneill-perform-fairytale
:
Glen Hansard and Lisa O'Neill perform “Fairytale of New York” at the
close of the funeral of Shane MacGowan, the 8th of December 2023.
I can’t remember who said it in the press over here, but it was along the
lines of “I can’t remember ever being at a funeral before where people
danced in the aisles.” …You’ll see it in about the last minute of the
video.
The thing is it’s deeply traditional for Irish death-rites to be festive.
Normally it’s the wake, but there are any number of extremely raucous
traditional Irish tunes about the shenanigans that would happen at a wake.
My dad had, long ago, asked for a wake like that, a big party with singing
and dancing, and we couldn’t because of Covid, we sat on Zoom and said
heartfelt things and drank whiskey instead, quietly on our separate
couches, such is the modern age. But that’s the tradition– you dance, and
you celebrate the deceased, you celebrate the things and people they
enjoyed. (Traditionally part of the role of a wake is to make sure the dead
person is really dead, and the most famous traditional song, Finnegan’s
Wake, features a corpse that revives at the wake.)
Anyway this is perfectly traditional, though you don’t usually do the
dancing bit at the church funeral, but you know how it is, in these modern
times things are a bit muddled. It’s certainly faithful to the spirit of
the thing.
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